1.
H.I.H. Prince Hua Feng,
Prince (HoShêCh'inWang)
Su. He fl. 1858, and had
issue, a son and a
daughter:

a.
General H.I.H. Prince
Shan-ch'i, Prince (HoShêCh'inWang)
Su. b. 1863, educ.
privately. Reduced to
poverty as a consequence
of the surrender of his
Manchurian estates to
Russia 1900. Dep.
Lieut-Gen. Bordered Red
Banner 1897-1900,
Vice-Presdt. Imperial
Clan Court 1900, Supt. of
Customs & Octroi at
Peking 1900-1901,
Lieut-Gen. Bordered Red
Banner 1901-1902, GOC
Peking Gendarmerie
1902-1904, Head of the
Archives of the Imperial
clan, Minister for the
Interior 1907-1911,
retired to Port Arthur
1911-1917, formed an
anti-Republican army in
the North East together
with the Mongol General
Babojab 1917, retired to
Port After after the
defeat of that army. m.
(fourth) Tong Chen, a
concubine (d.
1922). He d. at
Port Arthur, 27th
April 1922, having had
issue, twenty-one sons
and seventeen daughters,
including:

v.
Princess (Chün Chu
Kung Chu) Hsien-hsi
[Dongzhen]. b.
1907 (13thd/o
Tong Chen), educ.
Matsumato Girl's Sch.
Adopted 25th
October 1913 by Naniwa
Kawashima, 25th
October 1913 and assumed
the name of Yoshiko
Kawashima. Later styled
Cdt. Chin P'i-hui as Head
of the Japanese
Pacification Army in
Manchuria 1934-1940. m.
at Port Arthur, November
1927 (div. bf.
1931), Prince Kanjurjab,
son of Mongol General
Babojab. She was k.
(executed for treason) at
Peking, 25th
March 1948.

a)
H.H. Prince Boggodo, 2nd
Prince Chuang (Chuang HoShêCh'inWang). b. 1650
(s/o the first wife), educ.
privately. Succeeded his father 1655, and
had the designation of his princedom
altered to Chuang. He d.s.p.15th February 1723.